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Your nervous system is complex, but some fundamental knowledge can give you deeper insight into your injury. Explore the basics and learn more about spinal cord injuries.
Knowledge can help you feel more in control. If you’ve recently had a spinal cord injury, it may be helpful for you to understand the way the nervous system functions. That way you can better understand your injury.
Nervous system basics
The three critical components of the nervous system are:
These three components communicate with each other, and work together to help you move your body, feel pressure, and control body functions such as breathing, bowels, bladder, and blood pressure.
Complete vs. incomplete spinal cord injuries
When the spinal cord is injured, the nervous system can’t communicate the way they are supposed to. The nerves above the injury work fine, but the ones at and below the injury can’t receive or send messages properly. Sometimes all the messages stop, so there is no movement or sensation (feeling) below the level of the injury.
The severity of an injury is described as “complete” or “incomplete.” A complete injury means all functions below the injured area are lost. If the injury is incomplete, there is still some sensory or motor function below the injured area. To be classified as incomplete, there must be some function coming from the spinal cord section labeled S4 and S5 (see chart).
Your healthcare provider will run several tests to find out whether your injury is complete or incomplete. The completeness of your injury may change over time, so you may go through several rounds of tests.
Types of spinal cord injuries
The movement or function you may have lost depends on the location of the injury in your spinal cord. The spinal cord has four areas of nerves: cervical, thoracic, lumbar, and sacral:
Below is a complete list of the spinal segments, and the bodily functions they impact:
Spinal Segment | Functions Impacted |
C1-3 | Head control |
C5 | Lifting arm with shoulder, elbow flex |
C8 | Finger flex |
T2-T12 | Deep breathing |
L1-L2 | Hip flex |
Assessing your injury
Your doctor will be able to assess the completeness of your injury, as well as the type of spinal cord injury you’ve sustained. Once all the tests have been done, you’ll discuss where you may have lost function and what to expect going forward. Your doctor can also tell you whether you may be able to get some function back over time.
If you have questions, talk to your healthcare team. They may also be able to guide you to additional resources.
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